Converting Pressure Units

In order to understand how pressure can affect other properties of a gas, you need to know more about the different pressure units used.

There are 3 Units of Pressure we will use in chemistry:

SI unit: atm (atmosphere)

mm Hg (millimeters of mercury)

Torrs (named after Torricelli, an Italian scientist)

Think of a barometer (Toricelli’s work) like a thermometer for pressure. The higher the reading on the barometer, the higher the pressure. Of course, like some thermometers, barometers use the height of mercury to relay a measurement.

Since pressure is read in millimeters of mercury, we use that as a unit : mmHg. To credit Torecelli, we also call each mmHg, a Torr.

Hence: 1 mm Hg = 1 Torr

However, the SI unit for pressure is the atmosphere, or atm. So we need a way to convert between the units. Each 1 atm = 760 mmHg or 760 Torrs.

Use simple dimensional analysis and you can convert between all three units using conversion factors:

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